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...choice is [right-wing ex-Premier] Antoine Pinay. The Deputies don't like him, but they fear him less than De Gaulle. Pinay would demand very broad powers indeed-presumably nearly as broad as De Gaulle himself. You'll remember what Pinay did in the case of Morocco-as soon as the National Assembly took its All Saints' Day vacation in 1955, he gave the Moroccans their independence. In one week Pinay would have a program. Its first aim would be to end the fighting in Algeria...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: Right-Wing Thoughts | 4/7/1958 | See Source »

...graver crisis and far more parliamentary support than he now commands. The unrest in the French army, which has aroused nervous talk abroad of a military coup, is still largely confined to a few embittered career officers, mostly young colonels exasperated by years of frustration in Indo-China, Morocco, Suez and now Algeria. As for the ordinary Frenchman, he is too busy enjoying his nation's unprecedented prosperity to feel anything more than weary apathy toward politics. Last week saw two new records set in Paris. One was for the number of private cars leaving the city on weekend...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: Explosive Olive Branch | 3/31/1958 | See Source »

Armed with France's written pledge to give independence to Syria and Lebanon, F.D.R. in 1945 assured Saudi Arabia's Ibn Saud that he would back the Syrians and Lebanese by all means short of outright force. And during the Casablanca Conference Roosevelt insisted on dining with Morocco's Sultan Mohammed ben Youssef, then subject to France, pointedly told the Sultan: "A sovereign government should retain considerable control over its own resources." Most Frenchmen date the Sultan's stubborn drive toward ultimate independence from that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COLONIALISM AND THE U.S. The conflict of Ideal v. Reality | 3/24/1958 | See Source »

Gaillard envisages the establishment of a Mediterranean alliance composed of Tunisia, Morocco, Libya, Spain, Italy, Britain and France. It would also include Algeria-as a part of France. Militarily, the proposed pact would be designed to defend North Africa against both Communism and Nasserism. Economically, it would offer its members the right to participate in development of the oil and mineral resources of the Sahara...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Doubtful Card | 3/24/1958 | See Source »

...like other plausible-sounding French proposals. Gaillard's pact met many problems but not the crucial one, the status of Algeria. Tunisia and Morocco need help to keep their unbalanced economies viable, and in the past have shown willingness to accept that aid from France. But because of their citizens' sympathy for the Algerian rebels, Tunisia and Morocco have been moving away from, not toward, France. It was hard to see how that trend could be reversed by the offer of a pact which would, in effect, force both governments to ratify permanent French control of Algeria. Speaking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Doubtful Card | 3/24/1958 | See Source »

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